Shrove Tuesday
The last day before the beginning of Lent on the Gulf Coast that once belonged to France, it is Mardi Gras, “Fat Tuesday”: Laissez les bon temps rouler!
It was first celebrated in Mobile, Alabama, but the big show these days is in New Orleans, and it is a holiday in the state of Louisiana, because people wouldn’t show up for work anyway, so why fight it.
A tradition is to serve King cake, which is a circle of cinnamon bun dough with a white frosting on top sprinkled with sugar colored purple, gold, and green. If that weren’t bad enough, they put the figurine of a baby in the dough, and whoever finds it in their piece is supposed to be lucky. Actually if you find it and don’t choke on it, I guess you are lucky. You should use a small ceramic figurine, as some of the cheap plastic versions melt in the oven [yummy].
In Britain, Ireland, and many of the Commonwealth countries Shrove Tuesday is celebrated as Pancake Day. Apparently people are using up everything they give up for Lent.
February 13, 2024 Comments Off on Shrove Tuesday
Darwin Day
Today is Darwin Day celebrating the birth and works of one of the greatest scientists the world has ever known. He shares his birthdate, 12 February 1809, with another great man, Abraham Lincoln.
Darwin’s book, On the Origin of Species is a founding document of evolutionary biology.
February 12, 2024 2 Comments
Superb Owl Sunday
February 11, 2024 2 Comments
Happy New Year, 4721
Year of the Wood Dragon
Chinese New Year
[Spring Festival]
[Note: The Lunar New Year is tied to the Second New Moon after the Winter Solstice, which is on February 9th in my time zone and February 10th in China.]
February 9, 2024 2 Comments
Groundhog Day
It’s Groundhog Day and some of the militant marmots object to being disturbed.
FYI: this is approximately the midpoint between the Winter Solstice and the Vernal Equinox. It is called Imbolc among the Celts, which is why people are interested.
On average groundhogs are right 40% of the time. Flipping a coin has a better average for accuracy.
Update: The North American groundhogs agree that winter is over, but Lucy the Lobster disagrees.
February 2, 2024 Comments Off on Groundhog Day
Columbia
Commander:
Rick Douglas Husband, Colonel, USAF
Pilot:
William C. McCool, Commander, USN
Payload Commander:
Michael P. Anderson, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Mission Specialist:
Kalpana Chawla, PhD
David M. Brown, MD, Captain, USN
Laurel Blair Salton Clark, MD, Captain, USN
Payload Specialist:
Ilan Ramon, Colonel, Israel Air Force
NASA now has a Memorial Page honoring those who have been lost in the space program.
February 1, 2024 Comments Off on Columbia
Challenger
Commander:
Francis R. (Dick) Scobee, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Pilot:
Michael J. Smith, Commander, USN
Mission Specialist:
Judith A. Resnik
Ronald E. McNair
Ellison S. Onizuka, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Payload Specialist:
Gregory B. Jarvis
Sharon Christa McAuliffe
NASA now has a Memorial Page honoring those who have been lost in the space program.
January 28, 2024 Comments Off on Challenger
Apollo 1
Virgil “Gus” Ivan Grissom, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Edward Higgins White, II, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF
Roger Bruce Chaffee, Lieutenant Commander, USN
NASA now has a Memorial Page honoring those who have been lost in the space program.
January 27, 2024 Comments Off on Apollo 1
Burns Night
This is the anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns in Ayr, Scotland. The Burns Night celebrations conducted by Scots all over the world with haggis, whisky¹, and poetry.
Wikipedia has a description of the standard celebration, but easy on the malt or you may end up with a William McGonagall morning.
In honor of the occasion a bit of Robby Burns for the GOP “leadership”:
The best-laid schemes o’ mice an’ men
Gang aft agley
An’ lea’e us nought but grief an’ pain
For promis’d joy!To a Mouse
1. This is the correct spelling when referring to Scotland’s “water of life”.
January 25, 2024 Comments Off on Burns Night
Australia Day
The anniversary of the landing of the First Fleet under Captain Arthur Phillip at Port Jackson in New South Wales on January 26th, 1788.
Here’s the official site, and more information at Wikipedia.
[I should note that recently this has taken on most of the controversy of Columbus Day in the US, with some people noting the event being celebrated was actually an invasion. I have no right to an opinion on the controversy. Also, the 25th in the US is the 26th in Australia, The Date Line again.]
January 25, 2024 Comments Off on Australia Day
Iguana Alert
The graphic is from January, 2020 but it is applicable today for Florida as we are having a cold snap with temperatures in the 20s (F°). No drop bears, just drop lizards.
January 14, 2024 Comments Off on Iguana Alert
Rivet Ball
Fifty-five years ago, in the early hours of January 13th, 1969 I was forced to accept something that I had known for a while, but had pushed to the back of my mind: I was mortal and was going to die.
This was the first of several incidents when my chance of survival was a good deal less than 1 in 2. This wasn’t the scariest, but it was the first, and following on the heels of the terrible events of 1968, it had the biggest impact.
In the end the only “death” was an airplane, Rivet Ball, the Air Force’s only RC-135S. The military version of the Boeing 707, the fuselage broke in half, like an eggshell, on impact. A very talented pilot, John Achor, the aircraft commander, was responsible for that miracle.
I provide more detail on my other site.
January 13, 2024 Comments Off on Rivet Ball
Orthodox Christmas
С Рождеством Христовым to my Orthodox friends who are still waiting to see how the calendar reform works out.
January 7, 2024 Comments Off on Orthodox Christmas
Feast of the Epiphany
Today marks the Feast of the Epiphany and Día de los Reyes in Spanish-speaking countries.
This is the customary day for gift exchanges in many Christian cultures because it is the day that the Magi finally arrived in Bethlehem with their totally inappropriate gifts after putzing around for a week and a half because they didn’t want to ask for directions.
[Give me a break! They bring soft metal, smelly tree sap, and bitter medicine associated with embalming to people who could use a hot meal, baby clothes, and diapers.]
January 6, 2024 Comments Off on Feast of the Epiphany